2023 New Music Jason Prize Shortlist

2023 New Music Jason Prize – not sponsored by SmokeCartel.com

As we reach the conclusion of another year, it’s time to take stock of all we’ve gained and lost. Moreover, it’s a time to anticipate all that the New Year promises. Will there be an orderly US Election in 2024, or will they dive headlong into Civil War? More importantly, what is Taylor Swift going to do next? Enquiring minds want to know.

2023 in New Music was a grand exploration of many different moods and mindsets. What touched my soul most vividly are the following five albums. These are my five favourite albums of 2023, in contention for the highly-coveted New Music Jason Prize. Once again they will be listed in chronological order, based on their Release Dates.


Stephanie Lamprea – 14 Récitations

Released: February 10, 2023

My Shortlist begins with the most unorthodox album among all my favourites of the year. Stephanie Lamprea is a Colombian-American Soprano vocalist based in Glasgow, Scotland. Composed in 1977-78 by Greek composer Georges Aperghis, 14 Récitations is series of pieces written for solo voice. Imagining the Sheet Music for these works, while Lamprea inhabits the Music, is a giddy pleasure of the listening experience. If someone wants to gift me a copy, I’d be ever so pleased. She performs as though her voice is not doing what she wants it to do. She halts and stutters while the realization overcomes her, and with it you can hear the fear, the anger, the sadness, and ultimately the despair and madness. Some of the most challenging passages (mostly wordless, but for some broken French) I’ve ever heard are performed with confident bravura. Touches me as a person who lives with Multiple Sclerosis, having experienced the frustration of my body not working properly.


Rahill – Flowers At Your Feet

Released May 12, 2023

This album is the Dark Horse, among all my favourites. Iranian-American Singer/Songwriter Rahill Jamalifard’s debut album Flowers At Your Feet has quietly endeared me to its lyrical charms, having missed it on my Mid-year List. A mostly Downtempo affair, Rahill paints a vivid picture of a young woman trying to make sense of life on her own terms. Family is important to Jamalifard, and she gives reverence, particularly on Ode To Dad. But the album is not without its hooks, from the bouncy “doo-doo” singalong of I Smile For E, to the call-and-response (featuring Beck, inexplicably) of Fables. Not a bad one in the bunch.


Big Blood – First Aid Kit

Released June 9, 2023

South Portland, Maine’s Big Blood is a Family Band, which already feels like it has a weird smell to it. Historically, Family Bands have been created by domineering parents in search of Fame and Glory. I can’t say for certain that Caleb Mulkerin isn’t forcing his life partner Colleen Kinsella, or his daughter Quinnissa to write and sing their latest album, First Aid Kit. My assumption is that it’s a happy arrangement with well-adjusted humans. And the star of the show is thirteen year-old Quinnissa. The voice chimes with ringing clarity right from the start of In My Head. There’s a Ronnie Spector precociousness to her sound as she sings of the teenage frustration of being unable to talk to her crush on 1000 Times. There’s a tonal purity when Quinnissa and Colleen harmonize. When the elder takes the lead, such as with the haunting Makes Me Wonder (for Ma’Khia Bryant) the emotion is just as pure.


Justice Cow – my dad died

Released September 5, 2023

Families are a funny thing. They can be the backbone of who you are as a person. Sometimes in spite of themselves. Jessica Kion’s father taught her how to play piano. As Justice Cow, she has gone on to create the most tear-inducing album of the year. my dad died celebrates the life, and mourns the premature death of her father, due to alcoholism. I don’t know what it would be like to be raised by a parent with such a crippling disease, but I imagine the emotions are mixed, and deep. Kion lays her emotions out in full view right from the start of the record. Waiting For A Haunting imagines a ghostly conversation with her father. Unrelenting lays bare the hardships endured because of her father’s illness, before gloriously dissolving. On Read The Room she regrets the time she lashed out at her father when he was beyond control. On Just Like You, she lists the many things that her father gave her. Despite his downfalls, she endears to be like her old man. Jessica’s voice cuts right to the heart. Devastating.


Sampha – Lahai

Released October 20, 2023:

I referred to the Rahill album as the “Dark Horse” of the year, but what’s great about 2023 is how many of my favourites are of the “creeper” variety, in that it took some time to realize the hidden greatness within. Take Sampha’s Lahai: it was released in late October, but it wasn’t until quite recently (after seeing his NPR Tiny Desk Concert six weeks later) that my ears truly opened. Lahai is a delicate masterpiece, with multiple moving parts that work in consort with each other. Nothing overwhelms Sampha’s warm-toned voice, and the vocal arrangements are rich and nuanced. Glorious.


Who will take the Prize? Check back next week, Sunday, December 31 for the presentation of the 2023 New Music Jason Prize at 9 am EST.

2023 New Music Jason Prize Longlist

The 2023 New Music Jason Prize

As the Roman calendar nears its end for another lap around the cosmos, it’s time to take stock of all of my favourite Music for the year.

The New Music Jason Prize is a non-prestigious award that recognizes my Favourite Album released in a given year. Its second year of existence brings a strong list of contenders ranging from Hip-Hop to Classical and Country. To Soul and Punk, to Pop and Reggae, and even to gut-wrenching Singer-Songwriters. Have your fill!

The Longlist is a list of my twenty favourite albums of the year, compiled by a panel of one bearded Music fan, and listed in chronological order. Links to the original posts are embedded in the dates, and the albums are linked accordingly.


Week Ending February 3, 2023:

M(h)aol – Attachment Styles

Week Ending February 10, 2023:

Noa Mal – Everything Is Science, Baby

Stephanie Lamprea – 14 Récitations

Week Ending February 24, 2023:

Miss Grit – Follow The Cyborg

Miss Grit – Follow The Cyborg

Week Ending March 24, 2023:

Dazy – OTHERBODY

JPEGMAFIA x Danny Brown – Scaring The Hoes

Week Ending Friday, April 7, 2023:

Yaeji – With A Hammer

Yaeji – With A Hammer

Week Ending April 14, 2023:

Prof – Horse

Joe Young & The Co-Operators – A Distant Beat

Week Ending Friday, May 12, 2023:

Rahill – Flowers At Your Feet

Week Ending June 9, 2023:

Big Blood – First Aid Kit

Big Blood – First Aid Kit

Week Ending June 23, 2023

Geese – 3D Country

Week Ending Friday, July 14, 2023:

Snooper – Super Snõõper

Week Ending Friday, August 18, 2023:

Genesis Owusu – STRUGGLER

Genesis Owusu – STRUGGLER

Week Ending Friday, September 1, 2023:

Leo Lackritz – Crazy Enough

Week Ending Friday, September 8, 2023:

Justice Cow – my dad died

Week Ending Friday, October 20, 2023:

Sampha – Lahai

Sampha – Lahai

Week Ending Friday, October 27, 2023:

Alien Nosejob – The Derivative Sounds of… Or…A Dog Always Returns to Its Vomit

Week Ending Friday, November 17, 2023:

Danny Brown – Quaranta

Week Ending Friday, November 24, 2023:

Bloodshot Bill – Psyche-o-Billy

Bloodshot Bill – Psyche-o-Billy

The Shortlist of the five finalists for the 2023 New Music Jason Prize will be announced on Sunday, December 24.

The presentation of the 2023 New Music Jason Prize occurs on Sunday, December 31 at 9 am EST.

For the 2022 New Music Jason Prize Longlist, Click Here.
For the 2022 New Music Jason Prize Presentation, Click Here.

The New Music I’m Listening To Expeditiously This Week, September 2 – 8, 2023:

Good Day to one and all, my dear friends of mine! It’s a glorious Friday, the birds are singing, the kids are at school, and the New Music is a-flowing.

I’ve been able to find nine titles to bring to your attention today, with a couple of surprises to send your way.


I’m a little surprised to be recommending New Music from the Oldest Band In Existence, The Rolling Stones, but here we are. Mick and the geezers have a new album coming out in October, and we’ve been given our first taste of New Music in 18 years. With Angry they show us the same spry energy that has made them great, and the songsmithery is not too shabby. Could be one of their bigger hits of these last forty years.

The Rolling Stones – Angry

A Downtempo album was released this week from London Singer/Songwriter Tirzah, in collaboration with Mica Levi. trip9love…??? spotlights Tirzah’s moody voice, set to a backing of lazy beats and dreamy instrumentation.

Tirzah – trip9love…???

Darcy James Argue’s 18-piece Big Band, his Secret Society, has been around nearly fifteen years, playing out of New York City. Their latest release, Maximum Dynamic Tension, is a luscious production, with big beefy bottom and shimmering high end. Musically, it is thrillingly dense and agile, with cinematic passages for the Brain Movie in your head.

Darcy James Argue’s Secret Society – Dynamic Maximum Tension

Florian Arbenz is an in-demand session drummer from Switzerland who has been releasing a series of Conversations, improvisational sessions with fellow musicians. The tenth of the series was recorded during the travel restrictions of the pandemic with fellow Swiss Artists, including Martial In-Albon on trumpet, flugelhorn and sea shell, and Nils Wogram on trombone. Moody and adventurous.

Florian Arbenz – Conversations #10-Inland

To finish up with my Jazzy mood for this week, Black Market Brass is a nine-piece ensemble from Minneapolis. Their new album, Hox, is a hypnotic blend of Afrobeat, Psychedelic guitar, and punchy brass to get your feet moving.

Black Market Brass – Hox

Back in 2021 I discovered a band from Brazil with one of my favourite names. Sophia Chablau e Uma Enorme Perda de Tempo has returned with their sophomore releases d I’m pleased to report that Música do Esquecimento is an excellent use of your time. Uptempo, hook-heavy, and at times aggressive, with Chablau’s confident and stylish voice at the fore.

Sophia Chablau e Uma Enorme Perda de Tempo – Música do Esquecimento

Irish singer Róisín Murphy has long been a respected Artist in the Pop field. Her warm alto voice, once as lead of the 90’s band Moloko, has graced tracks with Jessie Ware and David Morales, as well as a handful of solo albums. Her latest, Hit Parade is a collaboration with German Electronic Producer DJ Koze and is thirteen tracks steeped in edgy production and bold sonic choices. Murphy’s voice is divine.

Róisín Murphy – Hit Parade

When I made my return to New Music in early 2020, after being distracted by babies and such, one of the first Artists that I was thrilled to discover was a female DJ from Tunisia named Deena Abdelwahed. Her sonic palate is thrilling, and I’m excited to see that she has released a new full-length. Jbal Rrsas جبل الرصاص drowns The Main Room at My Imaginary Nightclub in Eastern melodies, Deep Bass and warped beats.

Deena Abdelwahed – Jbal Rrsas جبل الرصاص

A confessional and emotional album crossed my path this week and touched my heart. Boston Singer/Songwriter Jessica Kion has been recording and performing as Justice Cow since 2015. Her latest, my dad died is a direct testimony of the trials of growing up with an alcoholic father, and sorting out the emotions of grief at his passing. Thoughtful and touching. The production and arrangements makes this album rise above its ken, and Jessica’s voice is devastating. It’s my Feature Pick for this week.

Justice Cow – my dad died

May you have a transcendental weekend, filled with joy and bliss. I’ll talk to you again soon.